Wednesday, March 31, 2010

As of April 15, you can find us in Chelsea Market's new-ish "Arcade", surrounded by such illustrious neighbors as Lucy's Whey, Jacques Torres and One Lucky Duck. We'll be right in front of the new set of doors on 15th street between 9th and 10th avenue...check us out!

Monday, March 1, 2010

I know it’s a funny thing to say, but I’m totally hooked on trade shows that target the food industry. In Paris, Chicago, New York and San Francisco, I’ve seen the future, and it’s a car crash I can’t but stop to watch.

So I was delighted to hear about the North American Pizza and Ice Cream Show in Columbus, Ohio last weekend, particularly when I learned which pop suppliers would be in attendance. Here was my chance to finally see in the flesh machines that I had only previously fantasized about late at night, toggling between refrigeration-specification websites, PDFs in Chinese and Google Translate.

Despite the fact that most East-Coasters think that the middle of the country is one long strip mall best seen from the air (ignoring the incontrovertible fact of New Jersey), I thought Columbus actually had a lot going for it. We went to the Surly Girl bar, which has a great selection of local and woman-brewed beers. I tried Columbus-style pizza, which is thin-crusted and cut into squares. Some nice guy, seeing us rooting around for parking-meter nickels, quietly handed us an unsolicited quarter. However you want to knock it down, Columbus has an old-school letterpress, at least one artisan baker, a dealer of new and used fountain pens, a decent vintage clothes scene, a European-style food hall, and a big Baptist church that someone’s turned into a bar.

What’s not to like about all that?

The trade show, too, hit all the right buttons. Seminars covered topics like, “Crafting a Flavor Assault,” “What is Frozen Yogurt?”, and “The Best…or Just Darn Good…Ice Cream.” (I really wish I could have attended the last one, if only to understand which of the two the presenter meant to discuss.)

Some guy tried to sell me a huge Thunderbird dough mixer and, when I wasn’t interested, offered to sell me a copy of his self-published science fiction romance novel.

Natural-gas company representatives offered free massages.

I saw one type of “neutral base” that many industrial pops are made from, and I believe it involved lard. Apparently, it improves mouthfeel. Clearly, the use of roasted peach pulp, strawberries or cream towards this purpose has not been fully explored.

I was told by everyone with whom I spoke that if we ever want our pops to have shelf life, preservatives are an inevitability. And the compostable packaging we were investigating will hasten freezer burn—good ol’ made-of-petroleum polypropylene is the way to go.

I was told that artificial flavors make pops that taste better than pops made with real fruit.

And I spent several hours playing with our dream pops machine.

Although its representatives offered a significant buy-today discount, Joel and David and I ultimately decided not to buy the machine, even though we’ve spent the winter drooling over it. We just can’t afford it right now—or rather, we have other priorities.

The representative took it in stride. “I know you’ll be back,” he said. “And even though you’re tiny compared to everyone else we deal with, you guys are going to work out. You’re doing your homework. I like to see it.” Oddly, his vote of confidence meant a lot to me.

As I left the convention, my head swimming, I passed a sign on the way to the airport that said “THE DICTIONARY IS THE ONLY PLACE WHERE SUCCESS COMES BEFORE WORK.” We have less than two months before pop season officially begins.

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